Hurricane Milton latest: Tampa’s beaches and downtown lie eerily deserted as ‘apocalyptic’ super storm approaches city

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Hurricane Milton is expected to return to Category 5 status today as it hurtles through the Gulf of Mexico towards Florida’s west coast. 

The current Category 4 tropical storm is set to make landfall in Tampa late Wednesday and into the early hours of Thursday – but its outer rings will be wreaking a trail of destruction across much of the state through Tuesday. 

Bringing 155mph winds and storm surges of up to 15 feet to major cities including Tampa, Orlando, and Fort Myers, experts have warned Milton is expected to be even more destructive than Hurricane Helene. 

Helene struck some of the same areas last month and killed 230 people. 

As Hurricane Milton closes in on Florida, millions of people who were placed under mandatory evacuation orders are attempting to flee, causing travel mayhem and gridlock on the roads. 

It is now too dangerous to fly from Tampa International Airport, which closed indefinitely at 9am on Tuesday. 

Follow DailyMail.com’s live coverage of the storm as it closes in on the US mainland.  

Terrifying simulation shows depth of Milton storm surge

A stunning Weather Channel simulation has shown just how deep the waters from Hurricane Milton could rise.

Host Stephanie Abrams stood on a CGI street for her report, and showed viewers how Tampa will look if hit by the widely-anticipated 15 foot storm surge.

Abrams began by showing viewers what a harmless-sounding three feet of water would look like. It sat above her waist, with the meteorologist warning that anyone still at home when the water hits this level will have left it too late to evacuate.

Moments later, the computerized water level rose to six feet – above Abrams’ head, with cars and debris beginning to float around her.

Abrams then let the simulation rise above nine feet – well above her head. The raging torrent had hit the second floor of nearby homes.

She said: ‘There are few places that are safe when the water rises this high.’

Current forecasts suggest Hurricane Milton could actually trigger storm surges of 15 feet, far higher than the frightening nine feet shown by the Weather Channel.

Winds from Milton are expected to crash into Tampa Bay Wednesday morning and will likely measure up to 129mph.

The storm surge – which is widely-regarded as being the most dangerous part of the hurricane – should arrive in the early hours of Thursday.

The simulation began on a Floridian-looking street being battered by heavy rain

Moments later, the host Stephanie Abrams explained that when the water hits three feet, it is too late to evacuate

Abrams showed the audience what six feet of water would look like, with the inundation over her head as cars begin to float

She finished the simulation with a terrifying nine foot storm surge. The surge caused by Miltion will likely reach a record-breaking 15 feet

Stunned viewers were shocked by how realistic and frightening the simulation was

‘Despicable’ hotels in Florida and Georgia raise prices from $95 to $700-a-NIGHT

A Marriott hotel was offering a room for two nights this week for $548 per night – or $707 for guests wanting to park their cars.

Comparatively, the same room is available in November for $94 per night.

Two Hilton properties in Kingsland, Georgia have more than doubled their nightly rate for people seeking accommodation on Wednesday, October 9.

The rate is $233 and $291 respectively for the hotels, which are located off the I95. But if you’re seeking a booking for Wednesday, October 26, just three weeks away, those prices drop to $116 and $115.

Another, the Hampton Inn and Suites in Brunswick, Georgia, was offering a room Wednesday night for $617.

Comparable rooms for a Wednesday night in November are available for as little as $131 in the same hotel.

‘You loot we shoot’: Florida business owners warn thieves not to take advantage

A sign in New Port Richey, just north of Tampa on Florida’s Gulf Coast, warns potential thieves not to try their luck on their partially-abandoned business premises.

A sign warns looters on a garage door taped with plastic and sand bags in preparation for Hurricane Milton on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in New Port Richey, Fla. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

Florida Waffle Houses are CLOSING

Waffle House is closing restaurants across Charlotte County, Hillsborough County, Lee County, Manatee County, Pasco County, Pinellas County and Volusia County, a spokesperson revealed to DailyMail.com.

The southern US restaurant chain is a bellwether for the severity of storms, since it has a reputation for staying open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, even during extreme weather events.

‘Our mission remains to keep our Associates out of harm’s way,’ Waffle House added in a statement.

‘Accordingly, in areas predicted to be hardest hit, we will preemptively close restaurants with a goal of reopening them as soon as it is safe to do so to serve the communities that have there for us over the years.

‘Locations in areas predicted to be in the path of Hurricane Milton and likely to suffer significant damage, or where mandatory evacuations have been ordered are places where preemptive closures will take place as a safety precaution. 

‘We will follow local evacuation orders.’

Photographs show Waffle House closure signs in Milton and Port Richey.

@rwhelantvYou know it's real when Waffle House is closed. #Milton #CapeCoral
A sign on a closed Waffle House on Highway US 19 in anticipation of Hurricane Milton on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in New Port Richey, Fla. (AP Photo/Mike Carlson)

Kamala Harris warns Floridians to heed evacuation orders

‘I cannot stress enough to all the folks in the Tampa area, please listen to evacuation orders, please listen to your officials.

‘I know a lot of folks out there have survived these hurricanes before. This one is going to be very very serious.

‘I urge you to please just grab whatever you need, listen to the orders you’re getting from your local officials – they know what Milton is about to be.’

New infrared satellite shows how rapidly Milton has intensified over the last two days

Entirety of America’s oldest city placed under evacuation order

The City of St Augustine on the northeast coast of Florida has been placed under a mandatory evacuation order.

St Johns County, which encompasses the city, issued the warning to all 15,000 residents in the city, along with those in waterfront properties and flood-prone areas nearby.

Residents have been told to leave by 8am Wednesday ‘due to the imminent threat posed by Hurricane Milton,’ the county said in the evacuation directive.

Founded in 1565, St Augustine is the oldest continuously occupied settlement of European and African-American origin in the United States.

The below photographs show St Augustine shortly after Hurricane Helene barreled over Florida.

The St. Augustine Bayfront the morning after Hurricane Helene
Hurricane Milton Monday afternoon 3

Astronaut shares incredible time-lapse of Hurricane Milton

An astronaut has shared footage of the hurricane from space as it hurtled over the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday morning.

Long lines at Costco in Orlando as residents prepare for Hurricane Milton

Shoppers have descended on supermarkets in Orlando, which is due to be heavily impacted by Hurricane Milton in the coming days.

Floridians have rushed to stockpile supplies as they prepare to bunker down and weather the storm, or evacuate.

Astronauts share surreal images of the hurricane from space

NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick shared a stunning image of Hurricane Milton from the window of his rocket on Tuesday morning.

President Biden tells people under evacuation orders to get out ‘NOW’

‘It could be one of the worst storms in 100 years… If you’re under evacuation orders, you should evacuate now,’ Biden warned residents in an announcement from the White House.

Livestreams show popular Florida beaches completely deserted

Webcam footage shows Clearwater Pier Beach in Tampa, which is set to be struck by Milton as it makes landfall on Wednesday night.

Normally a bustling tourist paradise famed for its brilliant white sands, the beach sat hauntingly empty Tuesday as Helene approaches.

Tampa’s downtown was also pictured almost deserted, with neighboring Sarasota a ghost town too. Large swathes of the Tampa Bay area are under evacuation orders.

Many other locals who have not yet been asked to evacuate have chosen to leave the city anyway to guarantee their safety during the once-in-a-century hurricane.

Winds from Milton should arrive early Wednesday and could measure up to 129mph.

And the far more dangerous storm surge of up to 15 feet is forecast to arrive early Friday.

The record-breaking wall of water will destroy and drown anything in its path.

Clearwater Pier Beach Tampa Bay /Florida Beach/ America/ Sand Key /Park Ocean Forecast

A webcam screengrab from Tuesday afternoon shows a deserted Clearwater Beach

Our live webcam on Plymouth Harbor on Sarasota Bay, Florida.

A causeway into Sarasota – another famed beach town in Tampa Bay – was also near-deserted

Dystopian pre-recorded message is piped onto streets urging locals to evacuate

Police in Treasure Island, which is in the middle of the danger zone for Hurricane Milton’s path of destruction, have been cruising around the streets omitting an eerie final warning message to any residents still remaining.

‘A local emergency currently exists,’ a robotic male voice blares out. ‘Quickly secure your home and business and safely evacuate the area. Listen to local media and authorities for additional information.’

The area of Pinellas County is under mandatory evacuation orders, as it is expected to be hit with 155mph winds and storm surges of up to 15 feet when Milton makes landfall on Wednesday night.

Terrifying map shows which areas will be impacted by maximum 15-foot storm surge

The National Weather Service has released a map showing the predicted storm surges for Florida’s coastal areas.

The mid-section of the Gulf Coast, including Tampa Bay, is expected to be hardest-hit with surges of up to 15 feet.

Meanwhile, areas around Yankeetown, Anclote River, and Bonita Beach will see surges of up to 10 feet.

The surges diminish for areas further from the Tampa Bay danger zone – but the entire Gulf Coast and a large swathe of the east coast will experience a surge of some form.

Peak storm surge map.

Tampa Bay water mains and fire hydrants to SHUT OFF ahead of Milton storm surge

Tampa Bay officials are shutting off access to running water ahead of Hurricane Milton barreling in.

Authorities in Manatee County said the ‘necessary interruption of service’ would ‘ensure the utility infrastructure remains intact and to save the sewer lift stations’ from the devastating impacts of the storm.

The county has also suspended trash pickup services.

In the Sarasota County city of Venice, faucets and even fire hydrants will be closed off from Tuesday evening.

This will continue throughout the duration of Milton’s wrath over the county plus several more days.

‘Once service is restored, you will be under a boil water advisory until you receive a notification stating the water is safe for consumption,’ city officials said.

A resident walks along a deserted street in the Ybor City section of Tampa ahead of Hurricane Milton's expected landfall in the middle of this week on October 8, 2024 in Florida. Hurricane Milton exploded in strength October 7 to become a potentially catastrophic Category 5 storm bound for Florida, threatening the US state with a second ferocious hurricane in as many weeks. (Photo by Bryan R. SMITH / AFP) (Photo by BRYAN R. SMITH/AFP via Getty Images)

Tampa, where Milton is set to make landfall is ‘the most vulnerable metro area in the US’ to storm surges – expert

Tampa is especially vulnerable to the destructive impacts of hurricanes, meaning Milton could be catastrophic, according to Dr Steven Godby, an expert in natural hazards in Nottingham Trent University’s School of Animal, Rural and Environmental Sciences.

Dr Godby said this is thanks to a combination of the low-lying water close to Tampa Bay and its dense population and infrastructure.

‘Tampa has long been regarded as the most vulnerable metropolitan area in the United States to storm surge flooding,’ Dr Godby explained to DailyMail.com

‘Direct hurricane strikes on the west coast of Florida are rare, but much of it is low-lying and the relatively shallow water offshore makes it vulnerable to large storm surges.

‘The last major hurricane (Category 3 on the Saffir-Simpson scale) to affect the Tampa Bay region made landfall in on 25 October 1921, bringing a storm surge of 3-3.5 metres and winds of 185 km/h that caused losses that today would be $180 million.

‘With Hurricane Milton bearing down on Tampa it is worth noting that the population at that time was around 160,000 and has now swelled to over three million, many living on ground less than three metres above sea level.

‘Large numbers of homes, schools, government buildings and critical infrastructure are at risk of flooding and wind damage.’

Dr Godby added that the debris left over by Hurricane Helene which struck the region two weeks ago also poses an additional risk of projectiles being whipped up by severe winds.

‘The authorities having been stressing that people living along this coast have no living memory of this kind of storm, need to evacuate if instructed to do so and to be somewhere safe by Tuesday night,’ he said.

Florida businesses board up windows ahead of Hurricane Milton

Floridians are doing their best to protect their homes and businesses from Milton’s incoming onslaught, deploying sandbags and boarding up their windows.

Many have been told to leave immediately, and it’s uncertain what they’ll return to – as the severe hurricane is expected to cause ‘catastrophic damage’ to well-built structures, the National Hurricane Center has warned.

Extraordinary satellite visual shows lightning inside the eye of the hurricane

Lightning can be seen flickering in the eye of Hurricane Milton, which is currently barreling through the Gulf of Mexico.

Hurricane Milton is set to double in size by nightfall on Wednesday

Milton expanded this morning as it hurtled over the Gulf of Mexico towards Tampa – making it potentially ‘one of the most destructive hurricanes on record’ for west-central Florida, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The hurricane’s 155mph winds are becoming more wide-reaching from the center of the storm – vastly increasing its capacity to cause widespread destruction.

Milton’s gales extended around 80 miles from the eye of the storm through Monday, and this increased to just over 100 miles by Wednesday morning.

‘Milton is still a relatively compact hurricane, but the wind field is expected to continue to grow in size as it approaches Florida,’ the National Hurricane Center said.

‘In fact, the official forecast shows the hurricane and tropical-storm-force winds roughly doubling in size by the time it makes landfall.’

Hurricane MILTON weather forecast maps tues 9am est

Florida roads in gridlock as people flock to evacuate

The Fort Myers/Naples/Cape Coral area of Florida on the I-75 towards Miami was almost at a standstill Tuesday morning as people tried to flee.

Similar scenes are also playing out on the I-4 towards Orlando and the NB I-75 out of Tampa.

I-75 northbound lanes near mile marker 354 as of 9:15 a.m. on Tuesday, October 8.
@Denver7TrafficThis is a look at the escape from the Ft Myers/Naples/Cape Coral area of Florida on I-75 towards Miami. Similar scenes on I-4 towards Orlando and on NB I-75 out of Tampa.

Tampa International Airport SHUTS DOWN



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